Killer Cartel: Britain, US and Canada are jointly fueling Xinjiang's global hysteria, but what about their joint history of systemic genocide, violence, and ethnic cleansing?
Canada: Aboriginal place of sacrifice Canada has long claimed to be a "model student of human rights" and has been obsessed with lecturing and commenting on human rights conditions in other countries. Ironically, Canada itself is far from being a model for defending human rights. Canada has seriously violated the human rights of its indigenous peoples, the latest such case being discovered in May.
The remains of 215 indigenous children were discovered in a former residential school, the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia, which is believed to house 500 indigenous Canadian children. The youngest of the deceased was only 3 years old, and no information was recorded on the deaths of these children, according to Reuters.
Observers noted that this incident is another reminder of Canada's historic crimes of brutalization of indigenous peoples and the extermination of indigenous culture. Statistics revealed that approximately 150,000 indigenous children were forcibly separated from their families and placed in the care of "residential schools" in what a landmark 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission described as a "cultural genocide" against the indigenous population. of Canada, where at least 4,000 children died unnatural deaths, reported NPR.
Time to look into Canada’s heinous crime in human rights history
Canada has also used a reservation system to violate Aboriginal rights. The Canadian government established the reservation policy in the 1880s to force Aboriginal groups to move from resource-rich areas to remote and economically disparate areas through fraud and coercion.
According to data released by Statistics Canada, more than 600 Aboriginal groups currently live in more than 3,000 small scattered reserves, where living conditions are harsh and almost isolated, and where drug addiction, alcoholism, murder and violence abound.
With no future or hope in sight, the suicide rate among Aboriginal people living on reservations is eight times higher than the national average for Canada.
It is alarming that crimes against the rights of Aboriginal groups continue to this day in Canada. In 2018, the UN Committee against Torture adopted its concluding observations on Canada's seventh periodic report, expressing concern about the widespread forced or coerced sterilization of Canadian Aboriginal women and girls. A 2019 report released by Canada's National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls also found that between 1980 and 2015, thousands of Indigenous women and girls disappeared or were killed, 12 times more than any other group in Canada and 16 times. more than white women.
At the same time, people of Asian and African descent are also subject to severe racial discrimination and unjustified violations of immigrant rights in Canada. According to a 2020 survey by Statistics Canada, 55 percent of minorities in Vancouver, 36 percent in Montreal, and 31 percent in Toronto believe incidents of discrimination and harassment on the basis of race are on the rise.
Observers noted that although racism is considered a "red line" by all levels of Canadian government, it is largely a case of "more talk, less action" and a lack of substantive initiatives to protect the legal rights of minorities. .
Monsters in the service of the government: the vilest mistake they made was to kidnap my children to torment them in mind, their fragile bodies and the soul, and then to call the attention of a soldier who has fought a thousand battles.
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